Details for First Cemetery in Potter County

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5375001696

Data

Marker Number 1696
Atlas Number 5375001696
Marker Title First Cemetery in Potter County
Index Entry First Cemetery in Potter County
Address US 287
City Amarillo
County Potter
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 238309
UTM Northing 3929685
Subject Codes cemetery; ranches/ranching
Marker Year 1967
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location From Amarillo, US 87/US 287 north about 24.4 mi. Marker is on west side of southbound lanes, east of LX Ranch Cemetery and 0.4 mi. N of the Canadian River.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text On the old _X (LX), first ranch in Potter County, established in 1877 by W.H. Bates and D.T. Beals, Boston (Mass.) industrialists. The earliest burials occurred after the LX was sold, 1884, to American Pastoral Land and Cattle Company, a British syndicate. First grave was dug for the LX bookkeeper's wife, Mrs. James Wyness, who died in Tascosa on June 15, 1887; six weeks later the newborn son who survived was laid at her side. The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Charley Mott died in 1888. Second adult buried here was P.O. ("Bunch") McCrary killed 1890 when his horse fell on him while he was roping a yearling. In 1893 James Bailey, hauling grain from Amarillo, bogged in quicksand in the Canadian; in getting his wagon out, he suffered exposure that brought on a fatal case of pneumonia. A 1902 grave was for James Bell, found dead in a corral with a bridle in his hand. When the syndicate was liquidated, this portion of the ranch was purchased by an early cattleman, R.B. Masterson. John Arnot, one of the original employees of the syndicate, and later a U.S. government cattle brands inspector, maintained the cemetery until 1945. It is now cared for by Mrs. Mary Masterson Fain, a descendant of third owner of the old ranch land. (1967)

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